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Posted

I began writing an epic TR centered on themes of conquering fear and self-doubt but I figured I'd get reamed for that, so here are some pretty pictures instead! I apologize in advance for the low image quality. Between getting the film scanned and resizing they came out pretty poor.

 

South Face of The Titan in The Fisher Towers of Utah.

 

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I don't know of many places as beautiful and peaceful as the Fisher Towers. There is a feeling of the eternal here. In early November my buddy Marcus and I climbed the Sun Devil Chimney on the South Face of The Titan. A beautiful line that offered high advernture, awesome position and some really fine climbing to boot! The route takes a plum line up the sun lit face above

 

 

Marcus cleaning pitch three

 

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Yes thats a pin. Yes the pitch has gone clean at C4. Lets just chalk it up to "situational ethics"

 

 

Starting up the Mud Chimney pitch

 

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The Fisher Towers have a reputation for mud. Well largely undeserved, this pitch offered up a classic mix of Fisher climbing. C2/3 pin scars led up past bent 30-year-old star drives into a genuine Mud Chimney. A thick stucoe of congeiled mud covered everything. Protection was sparse, luckily the chimney is rated 5.7 or so. Of course it's probably one of the most intimidating 5.7's around. Fun stuff!

 

 

Big exposure on pitch 5

 

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This pitch started out easy enough up a C1 crack. Just above where I took this photo I had to aid up a mud packed crack of indetermitable width by mud threads, double length slings looped around hunks of dried mud spanning the crack. It all seemed ernjoyable once I was on a good cam above them.

 

 

Looking north from the Summit

 

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3 PM. The sun is beginning to set to the west. It is clear, still and incredibly quiet. A perfect November day on the Colorado Plateau. Life is wonderful.

 

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Posted

sick!!! nice pix.

 

dberdinka said:

I began writing an epic TR centered on themes of conquering fear and self-doubt but I figured I'd get reamed for that

 

do it. there isn't a more relevant climbing discussion topic imo.

Posted

Awesome! Nice job Darin.

 

 

dberdinka said:

I began writing an epic TR centered on themes of conquering fear and self-doubt but I figured I'd get reamed for that

 

Do it. Put it on your webpage instead of here. You can keep the pictures big too maybe. Post a link, or not.

Posted

Yes thats a pin. Yes the pitch has gone clean at C4. Lets just chalk it up to "situational ethics"

 

It has gone free too at 5.13 to Stevie Haston.... maybe everybody that got involved in the Zodiac nailing dick measuring contest can come out of the closet on this one too confused.gif

Posted
Dru said:

Yes thats a pin. Yes the pitch has gone clean at C4. Lets just chalk it up to "situational ethics"

 

It has gone free too at 5.13 to Stevie Haston.... maybe everybody that got involved in the Zodiac nailing dick measuring contest can come out of the closet on this one too confused.gif

 

faq yellaf.gifyelrotflmao.gifcry.gifthumbs_up.gif

Posted

nice darin!

only route i have done there was the easy one..and it was darn near enough choss at the time and it is the clean one!!! hopefully i will do so more this winter!

 

beta please!

 

bigdrink.gif

 

 

Posted

We fixed the first two pitches (crux) one day then climbed five more another. Jugged and started leading by headlamp, rapped the route just before dark.

 

Erik, let me know what routes you want beta on, I'm familiar with the trade routes. climbingmoab.com is a good source of beta as well.

 

Chuck, JB etc. Writing good TRs is hard, I might work on it if I have time.

Posted

Noooooo!, crampons and ice axes are bad.

 

We love the mud

We want to be nice to the mud

Not poke and stick it with sharp objects.

Thats mean!

 

The mud is beautiful

We hold the mud softly in our hands

Don't yank on it

Don't squeeze it to hard!

Stem gently on the mud, or the mud might fall away

 

 

 

I have no clue why the fisher towers erode into mud. Cutler Sandstone is definitely very different from anything else in the desert.

 

Posted
dberdinka said:

I have no clue why the fisher towers erode into mud. Cutler Sandstone is definitely very different from anything else in the desert.

 

The Cutler Formation can be found in Canyonlands all the way to Cutler Creek, Colorado. The towers are the best example of the Cutler group. The rock is from the Permian Period, 230-290 million years ago. The towers are characterized by fluted runnels with grotesquely carved summit gargoyles and curtains of mud that add to the appearance. All of the towers have a Moenkopi cap rock near the summit that slows the erosion of the towers.

 

super soft sand stone with a harder capstone creates the irregular texture and features of the rock as the elements erode away at it.

 

very cool place!!!

 

onion creek is another cool area with more cutler.

 

 

 

 

Posted

The "why" of the mud is, in short this:

 

The precursor to Cutler was very fine silt and mud (and some grains large enough to be sand) deposited by an alluvial fan (waterway enters a flatter area, causing the velocity to slow, leading to suspended solids settling out). So when Cutler erodes, the result is mud. It's basically a mudstone, to begin with. Even the more erosion resistant overlying caprock, which is Moenkopi, is a siltstone/mudstone.

 

 

Posted

will, tho when you clean the outlaying mud, there tends to be what appears as solid stone...or atleast more solid.

 

but i have only had one experience on fisher towers rock...and that was on ancient art, which gets lotsa traffic compared to the rest of the group.

 

 

Posted

True. It works something like this:

 

The "rock" is silt/mud/sand mixture that was formed under tremendous pressure from overlying layers. The mud coating is eroded material. When the outer surface of the rock gets saturated it dissolves into a mud that flows in the runoff.

 

Once the mud runoff dries out, it congeals, but without the huge amounts of pressure and long periods of time (geologic time), it doesn't get compressed and solid like the rock it came from - it remains in a mud-like state.

 

I've only done AA as well, and I was pleasantly surprised at how solid the rock was.

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